So, you might not have known this, but last night (or rather early this morning) was the premiere of The Greatest Event In Television History on Adult Swim, a frame-by-frame recreation of the season four opening credits of the Robert Wagner show Hart to Hart, only starring Parks and Recreation's Amy Poehler and Adam Scott. It's complicated. Allow us to explain.

Jonah Lehrer is back to making everyone angry at him now that The New York Times's Julie Bosman has uncovered A Book About Love, the proposal for Lehrer's comeback effort in which, it appears, he will use the scandal that made him a journalistic pariah to make an argument about... love.

Two recent articles claim that the movie star as we know is going the way of the dodo. Old models and paradigms are crumbling and a new, megastar-less world is emerging. And they're right. The days of Julia and Tom are ending, perhaps already ended. And the younger generation of famous actors are struggling to take their place. Or maybe aren't even trying to.

Esther Williams, whose swimming talents translated into over-the-top production numbers for MGM in the 40s and 50s, has died at the age of 91. Her movies, with their forgettable titles and meaningless plots, were ultimately memorable for the lavish scenes that saw Williams performing otherworldly tricks. Like these.

The first post-Arrested Development original series from Netflix couldn't possibly come with the same level of hype, and probably won't reel in the extremely disruptive streaming service's next few million subscribers, but a new trailer reveals a foray into, shall we say, highbrow Lifetime that will certainly expand the binge-watching base.

The British actress has reportedly become the frontrunner to play Clinton in the buzzy biopic Rodham. It's major Hollywood news that could also have a political impact, with the movie set to come out in time for the 2016 election. Should the hypothetical Clinton campaign be worried about the woman behind Daisy Buchanan, when it could have had Jennifer Lawrence?

The Today show usually opens its 8 a.m. hour with its hosts outside in Rockefeller Plaza amidst the signs and smiling fans. But when, as Matt Lauer reported on-air, "a man attempted to harm himself with a knife" out there, the wholesome foursome moved back inside and turned what was a scary sight off-camera into a happy-go-awkward impromptu segment, Joe Biden jokes and all.

On Wednesday's evening news, NBC released a bombshell story on the government's drone targeting program, indicating that the U.S. isn't always certain of who they're targeting, despite assurances otherwise.

Following Iron Man 3's huge success, reports emerged of Robert Downey Jr. facing off with Marvel executives in hopes of nailing down his payday for future outings as Tony Stark. Considering that Avengers director Joss Whedon is now saying he won't make Avengers 2 without Downey Jr., it seems like the actor is going to get his cash.

Not content being just a writer of bargain-basement party-planning books and a columnist for a grocery store chain's magazine, the world's most famous aunt-to-be has taken many a young writer's dream job and is now officially a contributing editor at Vanity Fair. Which sounds just about right.

The Mad Men conspiracy theories are out there, and they may or may not lead to a big surprise in the last three episodes of season six. Now there's a new myth circulating and, boy, is it totally insane and only slightly plausible.

TMZ is all over the horrible (and unavoidable, if you pay any attention to such things) news today, a bunch of adults very publicly analyzing photos of a 15-year-old girl who just tried to kill herself. But beyond drawing some attention to mental health and suicide among adolescents, there's only harm to be done in discussing a story like this in any public forum, right?

The hunka-hunka British love playing Superman in next week's Man of Steel confirmed that he will replace Tom Cruise in The Man from U.N.C.L.E., the secret-agent remake blockbuster-to-be directed by Guy Ritchie. That's a pretty big sign that Cavill's future in Hollywood is already looking much, much better than the last young heartthrob to don an "S" on his chest.

TBS's Major League Baseball post-season coverage will be graced by everyone's favorite vitriolic television host: Keith Olbermann. Olbermann, who was fired from Current TV in March of last year, is returning to TV to lead TBS's studio show, The Hollywood Reporter's Marisa Guthrie writes.

A report from ESPN late Tuesday indicates that 20 Major League Baseball players, including Alex Rodriguez and Ryan Braun, could end up suspended from the league — for up to 100 games — in what might be some of the biggest doping scandal punishments in professional sports history.

For a while there, it looked like World War Z was going to be Brad Pitt's passion project turned hot undead hubristic mess, but the early reviews of the film have now arrived, and — would you look at that — it's actually just a run-of-the-mill summer zombie movie. And that's not a bad thing.

Gordon Gee — longtime academic, enemy of Catholic people, devil to Michigan grads everywhere, ruffler of SEC feathers, and soon-to-be-former president of (The) Ohio State University — has announced his retirement. But that's not stopping football fans across the country from laughing all the way to the AARP.

The problem, so far, with the third season of MTV's True Blood for the Instagram set is one we've seen on TV before, mostly on reality shows like the Real Housewives franchise but also on the effortful, too-obvious imitation Mad Men has been doing of itself lately. Sometimes a good show's audience becomes too fervent for its own good.

The overlapping comeback episodes of Arrested Development didn't live up to the comeback hopes of some of the show's rabid fans. So the rabid fans at Reddit are trying to fix things with a controversial re-editing.

If you read teen books, or have teenagers who read books, you probably know the name Sarah Dessen. Today marks the release of the author's eleventh novel, The Moon and More, and we spoke with her to learn about how she channels her teenage years over and over again in new ways as she contributes to the wealth of young adult fare.